Hillary Clinton delivers first major campaign speech amid trust drop

Hillary Clinton, the frontrunner in the 2016 Democratic presidential primaries, has held the first major rally of her campaign on Saturday, vowing to make the economy work for every American.

"America can't succeed unless you succeed, that is why I am
running for president of the United States," she told a
cheering crowd at New York City’s Roosevelt Island.

"Prosperity just can't be for CEOs and hedge fund managers.
Democracy can't be just for billionaires... Prosperity and
democracy are part of your basic bargain, too."

As Hillary Clinton hits the campaign road, it is people’s trust –
or rather the lack thereof – that is her major roadblock, as
polls show most Americans don’t see her as honest and
trustworthy.

What’s up with Clinton’s ratings?

The former secretary of state will have to do an outstanding job
to get the votes. However, her unfavorable ratings have plummeted
to a 7-year low, according to a Washington Post-ABC poll. Now more Americans have an unfavorable
view of her than a favorable one.

Yet a more salient metric than favorability may be
trustworthiness. According to a CNN/ORC poll last week, 57 percent of Americans think
Clinton isn’t honest and trustworthy, up from 49 percent in
March.

Allegations of corruption have raised serious doubts about her
suitability.

The Clinton Foundation controversies

After the second term of the Bill Clinton presidency came to an
end in 2001, the Clinton Foundation was founded as a
philanthropic organization. However, it is now an embarrassment
for Clinton’s 2016 campaign.

The Clinton Foundation, run by Hillary’s husband and America’s
42nd president, Bill Clinton, received millions of dollars from
the same foreign donors for whom the State Department under
Hillary Clinton approved $165 billion worth of commercial arms
sales.

“If you want a favor from one of the Clintons, whether it be
Bill or Hillary, in one of her positions as senator or secretary
of state, what you do is you donate money to the Clinton
foundation,” Curtis Ellis, communications director of the
American Jobs Alliance, told RT.

“I would describe this as a classic corrupt deal. This is
conflict of interest at the highest levels,” Ellis said.

“We’re back into political season, and therefore we will be
subjected to all kinds of destructions and attacks. I’m ready for
that,” Clinton answered ABC journalist’s question about whether foreign entities
received any kind of special treatment for making donations to
the Clinton Foundation.

Hillary’s insecure emails

Last March, it came to
light that when she was secretary of state, Clinton conducted all
business —public and private — solely through her personal email
account, on a server in her house. This puts into serious
question the email security of one of the highest-ranking
politicians in the United States government.

“I thought it would be easier to just carry one device for my
work and for my personal emails instead of two,” she said
when asked why she didn’t use separate email accounts for her
political life and private life.

Her lawyer, David Kendall, told the House Select Benghazi
Committee that the email address in question was “not an
address that existed during Secretary Clinton’s tenure.”
However, emails obtained by the New York Times show that it was indeed used by her for
official State Department business.

Investigating any wrongdoing on her part became that much more
difficult after Mrs Clinton deleted thousands of emails, which
she had sent as secretary of state.

A question of integrity

Making questionable claims is another bugbear for Clinton. She
has been accused of not just sweeping things under the carpet,
but also of downright lying.

During her first presidential bid in 2008, she described how she
and her daughter Chelsea ran for cover under hostile sniper fire
shortly after her plane landed in Tuzla, Bosnia, in 1996.

“I remember landing under sniper fire,” Clinton said,
adding that instead of a greeting ceremony, she and her daughter
“were basically told to run to our cars with our heads
down.”

Unfortunately for Clinton, several news outlets, such as CBS
news, which accompanied Hillary and her daughter on that trip to
Bosnia, had video footage, showing the Clintons walking from the
plane. There was no sign of tension or any danger.

Clinton said she had merely made a mistake when she told the
story about the supposed ambush.

"I did make a mistake in talking about it, you know, the last
time and recently," Clinton told reporters. She said that
she had a "different memory" about her landing.

"So I made a mistake. That happens. It proves I'm human,
which, you know, for some people, is a revelation."

This is reminiscent of the recent incident involving NBC anchor
Brian Williams, who claimed earlier this year that the helicopter
he was flying in was hit by an RPG. Like Clinton, Williams said
he had a false memory of the incident. The public didn’t buy it
and he has been suspended ever since.

Because of his less-than-honest telling of personal tales,
Williams’ career is probably over. Clinton enjoyed a different
fate – she was appointed secretary of state when President Obama
took office in 2009.

Foreign policy record

Hillary Clinton is expected to appear more presidential in the
race due to her foreign policy record, but some of those policies
too have landed her in trouble.

A year after Hillary Clinton cheered the death of Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi, with the infamous “We came, we saw, he
died” statement made in 2011, Libya was engulfed in chaos,
and four Americans, including the US ambassador to Libya, were
killed in Benghazi.

Her response to a question about what led to the attacks went
viral.

“What difference does it make at this point?” said
Clinton. “It’s our job to find out what happened,” she
said.

When Barack Obama entered the White House seven years ago, his
team promised to bring change to international politics. And
Hillary Clinton, who then held the top diplomatic job, was tasked
with clearing the skies with Moscow and resetting the relations
with Russia.

But last year, Hillary compared Russian President Vladimir Putin
with Adolf Hitler when talking about Moscow's alleged aggression
in Ukraine.

Republican presidential
candidate and Kentucky State Senator Rand Paul gave a keynote
speech in Los Angeles, Friday, were he said that, for her past
foreign policy failures, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary
Clinton "should be forever precluded from being
commander-in-chief" of the United States.

“Foreign policy is the first grounds to consider her to
miss-on,” Tyrrell said, stressing that Clinton’s
“hanging around with the elites” is now a “matter of
the public record,” making her a “pretty poor champion
for the middle class.”

The Hillary Clinton campaign had a rough start, but her
campaign’s largest obstacles seem to be in front of her, coming
in the form of indistinct policy stances and scandals that
continue to weigh down her momentum and popularity.